Sapulpa Evening Light (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 247, Ed. 1 Friday, September 15, 1911 Page: 3 of 4
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VOVH PAGES TOD AT.
&S.S.
DRIVES iiUT
MALARIAL POISONING
Malaria is a disease which gradually destroys the strong, nourish-
ing elements of the blood. When the malarial poison begins to absorb
the rich, red corpuscles of the circulation, we see pale, sallow com-
plexions and a general impairment of health. As the blood becomes
weaker the appetite fails, digestion is disturbed, chills and slight
fever are frequent, and in aggravated cases boils and eruptions break
out on the flesh. . Malaria is blood poverty, and the only way to cure
the trouble is to enrich and purify the circulation. Nothing is equal
to S.S.S. as a blood purifier, and it is especially adapted to the cure of
malarial troubles because it contains no harmful minerals, and while
ridding the system of the malarial germs, S.S.S. builds up the entire
constituion by its fine tonic effects. If you are suffering with
Malaria begin the use of S.S.S. and rid yourself of this weakening
disease. Book on the blood and any medical advice desired sent free
to all who write ana request it. S. S. S. is sold at drug stores.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, GA.
Trans-Atlantic
Cable Business
5
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LONDON TIME
1 | 2 | 3 | 4?5 | 6 | 7 I 8
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NEW YORK TIME
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II
| IN SOCIETY
spite the extreme heat which has vis-
ited our section of the county for the
past three weeks, we obligated sev-
eral new members and accepted Broth-
er and Sister Cates by transfer cards
from their home council in Missouri.
Mrs. H. C. Miller is entertaining to- After the business session, there was
day with a “shower” for Miss Nan an ic<- cream social indulged in. There
Kelly, who is to be married to Mr. are meetings of the count :l every
Newell Menifee. October 22. The hours i Thursday evening and at the next ses-
The Maids and Matrons will all be
present tomorrow at the home of .Mrs.
Jositth Davis, at 217 South Poplar
street. The hostess is Miss Edith
Blythe.
of the ''shower” are from 1 to 4
o’clock and a large number of guests
are present. It was going on when
The Light went to press so a full re-
l«>rt will be given tomorrow.
A “consultation conference" be-
tween several prominent reel; county
physicians is to take place at the
home of Mrs. Minnie Sayl< s, near the
Prance hotel. Those invite,! are Doc-
tors Toney and Garland of 3apul pa,
Black of Tulsa and Moyer ot Kiefer.
After the conference a social sessio
will be indulged in.
sion there Will be quite a number of
new members ob’igated- * Dr. L. M.
Toney, the field manager for the K A-
L. of S., is proving an invaluable aid
and although from the cold eastern
country and therefore naturally suf-
fering from the climate of this part of
the -I nipn, is working assiduously to
the-end hat Sapulpa Council 1550 will
lead all others in the* race for su-
premacy.
Miss Minnie Williams of Claremore
is the guest of Dr. L. M. Toney.
Sapulpa Council 1550, K. & L. of S.,
met In due session yesterday and de-
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Fulp will leave
this afternoon for Iudlanapolis, Ind-,
to attend the meeting of the grand
lodge I. O. O. F. They will be away
about ten days.
H. F. DeLozier. live stock agent for
the Frisco, is spending a few days at
his home in this city.
■H-H4-1-M-H-H II -I
+ +
+ CITT IN BRIEF. -fr
I"I"b
YOUR TELEPHONE BILL 18 NOW
DUE; DON’T FORGET THE 17th 18
CUT OFF DAY. 18-31
For paisless Dentistry and ptlnkn
prices see Dr. J. N. Rolte. Union Den-
tal Co, 110 East Dewey Ave, Snpnlpa,
Okla. _
HARRY R. HAAS. M. D., a special-
ist in diseases of the eye, ear, nose and
thToat, and the fitting of glasses, is
now located in Sapulpa. Office, Itoo.n
No. 2 in Brin Bldg, corner Park and
East Dewey. Phone No. 684.
The ladies ot.<he Baptist church will
serve an old time chicken dinner and
supper at the building formerly oc-
cupied by Wollmans, Saturday. Come
and get a home cooked dinner for
25 cents.
WHAT $1.00 WILL DO.
$1-00 bottle of Hail’s Texas Wonder,
a 60 days’ treatment, seldom fails to
cure Kidney, Bladder or Rheumatic
trouble. It gives quick and permanent
.relief. Write Tor testimonials. Dr. E.
W. Hall. 2926 OMve street, Sf. Ixuiis.
Mo. Sold by druggists.
FRISCO PAYROLL TODAY
Frisco employes today received their
regular monthly checks for August
and business has picked up this after-
noon accordingly. The amoun; this
month is about the same as last month
and it is believed that next month will I
be considerably better, because more
men were put ou the first of this
month.
Motor Boat to Penetrate China.
Union Hill. N. J., Sept. 15.—Inhabit
ants of the province of Kul Chow, 1000
miles in the interior of China, are
soon to see an American motor boat,
the first craft of its kind to ply the
waters of the Yuen river- The Rev.
Ur. Frederick Krumling. a medical
missionary of the Evangelical asso-
ciation has received the motor boat
as a gift and a church here is now
collecting a fund to pay the transpor-
tation charges to China.
Report Of The Condition O! The
SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
At The Close Of Business, Sept. 1, 1911
^ RESOURCES=
Loans and Discounts................................................ $229,201.07
Banking House...................... ....................................... 11,500.00
Furniture and Fixtures ................................ . 5,671.57
High Grade Bonds, •
Warrants & Etc.,. $40,911.14
Cash and Due from Banks.........78,646.67 119,757.81
Total............ $366,130.45
N 6-****rjtaWa
^LIABILITIES:
Capitol Stock.................................
Surplus and Undivided Profits
Rediscounts...............................
Bonds Borrowed .....................
Deposits „................... .......
Total ____
$50,000.00
3,956.52
12,500.00
10,000.00
289,673.93
$366,130.45
-=
■ The Above Statement is Correct
I IBS. B. BURNETT, Cashier
[l=^======^===^^=x===========^=======^^^=====:
UNUTILIZED
capacity
iiilipp
Traffic Chart of Western Union, Anglo-American and Direct U. S. Cable
Business, Showing Capacity of the Cables and the Proportion Now Utilized.
Proposed Modification of
Existing Arrangements
A provisional modification of an
arrangement which has existed for
many years has been reached between
the Western Union Telegraph Com-
pany, The Anglo-American Cable
Company and the Direct U. S. Cable
Company, under which the cable sys-
tems of these companies now worked
exclusively in business connection
with each other, but operated and
maintained separately, will be oper-
ated in direct physical connection
with each other and with the Western
Union land system.
Two objects are to be attained by
this arrangement:
First, more efficient and economi-
cal operation.
Second, the introduction of new
form* of service to the ndvantag: ol
the public.
The Trans-Atlantic Cable
Situation and Competition
The trans-Atlantic cable situation
is as follows:
The Mackay group of seven ca-
bles, including the German cables,
owned by or worked in physical con-
nection with the telegraph lines of
that company form one system.
The French cables comprise an in-
dependent system, using both the
Western Union and the Mackay land
lines for their United States connec-
tion.
In competition with these is the
Western Union group of cables, eight
in all, owned by three separate com-
panies, two of which are British
companies owning five of the eight
cables.
Two only of the British owned
cablet terminate in the United States
and all of them are entirely depen-
dent on the Western Union for their
connection with any telegraph system,
or for their reaching any centre of
business, and are now worked exclu-
sively, to far as business is concerned,
with the Weetern Union.
Efficiency Increased,
• Waste Prevented
The proposed arrangement between
the Western Union, the Anglo-Amer-
ican and the Direct U. S. companies
will bring the eight cables of the three
companies under one operating con-
trol. The consequent increase in
effectiveness and economy will place
the Western Union in a position to
offer certain advantages in cable
service not now enjoyed by the public.
The other way open to enable
the Western Union to make such im-
provements and introduce such new
services as it proposes to do, would
be to lay new cables. This would
seem to be the height of folly.
Duplication of the existing trans-
Atlantic cable facilities at a cost of
many millions, when there are more
than ample facilities for all business,
would put an unnecessary financial
burden upon an already fully burdened
business and would probably postpone
the reduction of rates or introduction
of new services.
Limited Business Hours
and Idle Facilities
As at present carried on, the trans-
Atlantic cable business is practically
all flash service, i. t. instantaneous.
Owing to the difference in time, there
are only a few business hours of the
day common to both sides and during
these hours at least 75;. of the cable
business is done. This is demon-
strated by the accompanying chart.
In the interests of international
business nothing should be done to
interfere in any way with the so-called
flash or instantaneous service, and
the lines should be kept clear to ac-
commodate such messages during the
few business hours common to both
countries; but to continue to confine
the cables to this class of service, as
at present, will utilize only about 25$
of the existing capacity of millions of
property and places on that limited
aervice all the capital, maintenance
and operating chargea.
The limited time and the character
of the buaineas, if best results are to
be obtained, demand direct cable cir-
cuits between principal centres of the
two sides of the Atlantic, as well as
special circuits devoted to special
business.
Efficient Service Requires
Sufficient Facilities
To meet these requirements it is
essential not only that there be at ail
times sufficient cable facilities, under
one control, but that they should be
operated interchangeably with each
other and in close physical connec-
tion with land lines as one system.
Ample spare facilities are necessary
to provide against the very frequent
cable interruptions.
Neither the Western Union nor any
one of the companies of the Western
Union group has, independently of the
others, facilities enough to handle
.he business which at times any one
company might be called upon to take
care of, because of some particular
rush of business, or because of some
cable interruption. Nor could any one
company furnish all the direct circuits
necessary for efficient service, al-
though the combined facilities of
these companies are ample if they
could be used supplementary to each
other and interchangeably.
As it is, each company operate* its
own cables through separate and dis-
tinct offices and under separate and
distinct management. All interchange
of business is by actual transfer of the
business from one company to the
other, with the consequent delay and
interruption of a service in which
seconds are valuable.
Daily and Week-end
Cable Letters
So soon as the proposed arrange-
ment goes into effect, the Western
Union purposes, with the consent of
the British Post Office Department,
to introduce at least two new features
or services in addition to the proposed
deferred rate—the
DAILY CABLE LETTER
and the
WEEK-END CABLE LETTER
at a very low rate for cable service
only. This will enable the pmbhc to
save the six to sight days consumed in
the trans-Atlantic passage of nurils.
Monopoly of Cable
Business Impossible
There is no cable monopoly pos-
sible. The three systems—the
Western Union, the French and tha
Mackay—will continue to exist.
The Mackay Companies is a hold-
ing organization with no physical
property, but exercising through stock
ownership, lease or contract, operat-
ing control of various companies
owning land lines and cables which
make up the Mackay System. Through
this control all the various properties
are operated as one system to great
advantage in service over what could
be given by these same companies
if operated separately.
The French cables form anbther
system.
The Western Union System, under
the proposed arrangement for one
operating control over the present
segregated units, will be enabled to
make two distinct advances in the
trans-Atlantic cable business:
1—BETTER SERVICE. Thiswillbe
insured by more efficient and econom-
ical working resulting from single
direction over the operations of both
cables and land lines.
a-PUBLIC AD VANTAGES. The
greater part of the cable capacity has
been and is now unutilized. It will
continue to lie dormant and unutilized
under existing conditions and tradi-
tions. The Western Union purposes
to make these wasted facilities useful
to the public by means of new kinds
of cable service.
In addition, the Western Union in-
tend* to nationalize its land lines by
opening them to all trans-Atlantic
cable companies.
CHANGE
IN WOMAN’S
LIFE
Made Safe by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Graniterille, Yt. — “I was pasting
through the Change 1 >f I.ifeandsullered
l i o in nervousness
aiul other annoying
symptoms, and i
ean truly say that
Lydia E. l’inkhnni’s
Vegetable ('mu.
pound has proved
worth mountains ot
gold to me, as It
restored my health
and strength. 1
never forget to tell
my friends what
Lydia E. l’inkham’s
Vegetable Compound lias done for nit
during this trying period. Completi
restoration to health naans so much
to me that for tiie sake of other suffer-
ing women I am willing to make my
trouble public so you mav publish|
this letter."—M1.' Ciias. lUtit lay,
H.i-M)., Gnuiiteviilo, \
Xo other medicine for woman’s ills
has received such wide-spread and un-
qualified endorsement. No other med.
ieine we know of lias such a record
of cures as has Lydia E. I’inkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
For more than 30 years it lias been
curing woman’s ills such as inflamma-
tion, ulceration, tibroid tumors, irreg
ularities. periodic pains and nervous
prostration, and it is unequalled for
carrying women safely through the
period of change of life.
Mrs. Pinkhnni, at Lynn, Ninas.,
invites all sick women to write
her for adviee. Her advice is free,
and always helpfuL
RESOURI 1 >.
Loans ami Discounts..................................$251,531.62
Bonds uud Premiums................................... 36,200.00
Banking House Furniture .aid Fixtures .................. 21,200.00
Other iiea! Estate...................................... 3,558.73
Warrants .................................$16,308.78
Cash and Sight Exchange.....................60.950.58 77,239.36
$3X9,779 71
LIABILITIES
Capital and Surplus Profits...........
Circulation .
Deposits
$389,779.71
We invite your attention to the above repor and Invite you to place
an account with us.
We feel ihal i\e have demonstrated our ability to serve our custom-
ers under all conditions ami know that an account with us will
prove of value to you.
PHIL J. LEHNHAHD, Cashier.
TO EUROPE
London, Eng. Sept. 15.—The Earl
and Countess of Granard have return-
ed from America, proceeding to Castle
Forbes from Queenstown where they
will spend the autumn.
Captain and Mrs. Spender Clay have
arrived at Dipple Farm, Forharbers
and sill remain there for the autumn
tishing season as they have rented the
Reaches of Spey from the Duke of
Richmond.
Furt Duchesne Ordered Abandoned.
4
Denver, Colo.. Sept. 15—Army
headquarters in Denver today received
word that Fort Duchesne in Eastern
Utah has been ordered abandoned and
the squadron of rhe First cavalry or-
dered to Join its regiment in Califor-
nia-
UkeMagtc
K C fiakingf Powder works
like magic. Recipes formerly
considered difficult to bake
now come out of the oven
light, dainty and deli-
cious. It fairly makes
you hungry to look at
them.
BAKING
POWDER
Is the housewife’s
best friend, lightn-
ing her burdens as
well as the food.
Wherever K C is used
you will find healthy,
happy families and a con-
tented housewife. Com-
plies with all pure food laws,!
both State and National. ,
Jaquas Mfg. Co., Chicago
f
MAY OUST ASTOR PASTOR
Providence, R. 1„ Sept. 15. — Calling
unfortunate occurance.” members of
the performance of the Astor-Force
ceremony “disgraceful" the Elmwood
Temple Congregational Crurch, of
which the Rev. Joseph M. Lambert is
pastor, declared toinght they would
take action to ask formally for Doctor
Lambert’s resignation.
To escape the reporters who be-
s'eged her home. Mrs. Lginberthas left!
and her whercalioutg are unknown.
Doctor Lambert is on the Astor yacht.
It is expected he will be landed tonight
where the reporters can’t reach him.;
Doctor Lambert's fee is variously es- j
tima;ed at from $1,969 to $5,000.
The Rev. Edward T. Root of the Fed-;
eration of Churches of Rhode Island |
toinght said:
“It is most disgraceful and unfor-
tunate. I suppose the $1,000 fee was
too much.”
Henry W. Purlngton, treasurer of
Doctor Lambert's church, said:
“I should not like to be in l-ambert’s
boots. 1 can't amagine what made
him do it. unless it was the money.”
It is said tonight the preacher’s
action will be brought before the
Congregational council of the state-
DON'T FORGET TO FAY YOUR
TELEPHONE RILL THE I7thj THAT
18 (I TT OFF DAY. 13-31
Light want ads bring results.
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY
New York, Sept 1st 1911. Deo. N. Vail, President
ilL ftL lUjl j] I1D Dny .panels were exhausted without se-
ULnr Mill UUmQ DU I I curing even one juryman Ellis auu
IS CHIEF WITNESS lle',OU *fre heavily guarded in the
Summerset. Ky.. Sept. 15.—Special
bailiffs left here today to summon a
venire of 190 men in Lincqln county
from which to select a jury to try
Mount Helton and James Ellis
charged with the murder of A. J.
Betty and W. F. Heathburn, in July-
At yesterday s season the regular
jail here, having been brough' from
Danville, where they were he’.d for
safekeeping. .Mob violence js feared.
The feature of the trial will be the
testimony.of a deaf and duni! hoy.
who is alleged to have seen the kill-
ing of the two men. It will be the
first time in Kentucky that evidence
has ever been given by signs.
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF THE
Oklahoma State Bank
OF SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
AS RENDERED TO BANK COMMISSIONER AT CLC^-
SEPTEMBER I, 1911
.'J5INESS.
Resources
Loans and Discounts —
$96,813.58
Furniture and Fixtures
2,500.00
Warrant $ 59,708.05
Cash 6c Sight Ex. 119,415.29
179.123.34
$278,436.92
#
Capital Stock . _____
$25,OOC.OO
Undivided Profits (net)
951.66
Deposits
252,485.26
$278,436.92
The Above Statement is Correct.
A. P. CRAWFORD, Cashier.
* »*.
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Flynn, James Dennis. Sapulpa Evening Light (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 247, Ed. 1 Friday, September 15, 1911, newspaper, September 15, 1911; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1474779/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.